David: We had been talking about
crashes in Antarctica, and you had mentioned that, at the deepest level,
there's one that landed on what's like a continental surface with
tropical type of plants. And then you said that you had a lot more
experience with a second crash.

Now one of the things that I find
really fascinating in what you've been telling us, is that there was a
set of controls for beings that had three long fingers. So there's a lot
of really interesting connections being made here.

And we were
also talking about the mathematics of base three and the idea that,
perhaps, we were given five fingers to confuse us away from this ideal
math.

What would be the practical application of this base three mathematics that you say your friend has discovered?

If
we start using that, what are some of the technological breakthroughs
that we might have, or scientific breakthroughs that we might have?

Pete: What would be the proximate result, in the very beginning,
probably half the mathematicians in the world would violently protest
against it. And the other half would see it immediately.

It can
easily be seen because he's broken it down into a series of charts, of
charting numbers, and with different colors for the different digits and
the different, say, points.

And then we'd try to say, 'Well, here are all the things that this makes possible'.

We
can't even begin to imagine maybe 1% of the things that it'll make
possible. It's so totally changes our representational viewpoint of the
universe. Mathematics is a language.